View allAll Photos Tagged REMAINS
The sun sets on the timbers of the Abana Shipwreck off the Fylde coast at Little Bispham.
The very low tide allowed me to walk out to this wreck which has lain here since sinking in 1894. Sailing from Liverpool to Savannah in Georgia USA this large wooden sailing ship encountered a terrible December storm in the Irish sea and its sails were ripped to shreds. Mistaking Blackpool Tower for a lighthouse the ship ran aground and all 17 crew members and ships dog were rescued by the Blackpool lifeboat.
I have masses of yellow Heliopsis along the fence lines in my backyard....hence I have masses of spiky remnants. HMM
Before the land was reclaimed in order to build a port, Southampton had a long beach and shoreline. This little patch (bottom left hand corner) is all that remains of the beach, and few notice that even this is there. There are plans to remove the dilapidated pier and renovate the area, and when that happens this little patch of beach will sadly disappear.
The remains of the quarry smiddy (Blacksmith) with Mither Tap beyond.
The notorious Willie Jamieson stayed here around 1850, 30 years after the quarry closed.
Wanted to photograph the last remains of this fence on Sizewell beach before it disappears altogether!
Canon 400mm 2.8 III + ASI183GT (OIII et SII)
Canon 400mm+ x1.4 DO II + ASI1600MM (Ha)
Ha : 26x300s
SII : 28x300s
OIII : 35x300s
Total: 7,4h
IC 443 (also known as the Jellyfish Nebula and Sharpless 248 (Sh2-248)) is a galactic supernova remnant (SNR) in the constellation Gemini. On the plane of the sky, it is located near the star Eta Geminorum. Its distance is roughly 5,000 light years from Earth.
IC 443 may be the remains of a supernova that occurred 3,000 - 30,000 years ago. The same supernova event likely created the neutron star CXOU J061705.3+222127, the collapsed remnant of the stellar core. IC 443 is one of the best-studied cases of supernova remnants interacting with surrounding molecular clouds
(src wikipedia)
Dinosaur Jr. - „Out there“
www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyE0sEHw3cc
I know your name
I know the people out there feel the same
I know you′re gone
I hope you got some friends to come along
I know you're out there
I know you′re gone
You can't say that's fair
Can′t you be wrong?
I feel ok
Sure, I know that′s not what people say
Maybe they're wrong
Maybe you weren′t on my side all along
I know you're out there
I know you′re gone
You can't say that′s fair
Can't you be wrong?
I know you're out there
You′re still a case
It′s still the place
Weren't you invited?
It′s what you can't spare
Whatever′s left, just hide the rest
And bring it right in
I know it's sick
I know you think a game is just a trick
Maybe I′ve changed
Just tell me was this all in vain?
I know you're out there
I know that space is not a race
Weren't you invited?
It′s what you can′t spare
Whatever's left, just hide the rest
And bring it right in
Maintained inside
I′ve lost my range
Feel the strain
Weren't you invited?
Just never try
It′s still the place,
you're still the case,
now bring it right in
Breath rises, breath falls —
this is the whole world.
Whatever comes, comes;
whatever goes, goes.
The stillness remains.
Haughton Chapel was originally the parish church of the long since vanished village of Haughton. Probably made of wood in its early years (around 1000 A.D.) it was gradually re-built in stone from the late Saxon/early Norman years until the 1400’s. its remains lie in a small copse by the sides of the River Maun around 400 metres from Haughton Hall Farm. Modernisation work was carried out on the chapel in the 1300’s as can be seen from the pointed arches of that date. These were then blocked off when the northern aisle was demolished in the 1400’s. Although no graves can be seen today there are burials in the surrounding grounds and within the chapel walls. Some gravestones were removed many years ago. Since 1257 the chapel , dedicated to St James, has been link to the parish church of St Edmunds in Walesby. Until recently 2 fonts from the chapel, as was a gravestone, lay in the churchyard in Walesby. The fonts were Norman with one possibly being of the late Saxon period. The land around the chapel was enclosed by the residents of Haughton Hall in 1509. These, the Stanhopes, used the chapel as their private place of worship and burial. Later in the reign of Henry VII the Hall was sold to the Holles family who retained the use of the chapel for private services. The village of Haughton may have lain close to the chapel and was probably abandoned at the time of enclosure – no trace remains of it today.
Remains of an old guard tower in the coast of Huelva (Spain). Venus and moon together
Entre los restos de una antigua torre brilla la mangata, refulgiendo sobre el mar con su estela de plata
The final CNW AC44 leads IPDG2 into Geneva, IL. There was plenty of people out for this one in Chicagoland.
After millennia of waves hitting these stones you must wonder what they looked like before they effectively became these stumps in the sand
The remains of a dairy cattle yard in South Central Wisconsin.A quick glance around showed old foundations of a barn and other buildings in the overgrowth.
Have a great fence Friday all!